News Digest PAGE 2THURSDAY DECEMBER 12,1996 Aid readies starving refugees in Zaire 1 United Nations and UNICEF are working to provide relief to millions of Rwanda. GOMA, Zaire (AP) — Security guards with sticks beat hundreds of hungry residents back from the en trance to a food warehouse Wednes day, as Zairians scrambled for the crumbs of the first aid to arrive in more than two weeks. Nearly a month after fighting broke out in eastern Zaire between Tutsi rebels and the Zairian army, neither food nor medical aid has reached the 1.1 million Rwandan Hutu refugees Sixteen trucks and jeeps came in from neighboring Rwanda on Monday, 1 1 but the 16 tons of beans and rice they carried were just a drop in this region’s ocean of need. U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali said Wednesday that Canada has agreed to lead a military contingent that could bring up to 20,000 troops to try to restore calm and aid refugees in eastern Zaire. He said details of the proposed Canadian-led military intervention are still being settled. “People are taking between 10,000 and 20,000 (troops),” Boutros-Ghali told reporters, speaking in Rome the day before the opening of the U.N. World Food Summit. He would not estimate when the first soldiers could arrive. Canadian officials say they have committed 180 soldiers in a Disaster Assistance Response Team and ex pressed a willingness to provide 1,500 additional troops. Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien spoke to 15 world leaders over the weekend, trying to firm up participation in the force, his aides said. Desperation was increasing even among Goma’s 80,000 residents, thought to be slightly better off than the refugees. “We come here every day just in case there are some beans or rice for us,” said Muhima Kishuba, a 35-year old Zairian teacher and father of four. “There’s hardly any food at the market, and we have no money to buy it with anyway,” he said, as he stood outside Goma’s main food aid com pound. “There are many hungry people inGoma.” Michele Quintaglie, spokeswoman for the U.N. World Food Program, said aid representatives were negotiating with the rebels who control Goma, as well as the Zairian cities of Buka vu and Uvira farther south, to try to get the food to the people who need it. “At this pace, it’s going to be nearly impossible to get aid to the thousands who need to be reached,” she said. International aid workers fled the chaos in Goma and Bukavu more than two weeks ago and have not yet been allowed back in. An estimated 100,000 Hutu refu gees scattered in the hills above Uvira need food but are afraid to come down, and more than 60,000 refugees are re ported to be converging on Kisangani, 330 miles northwest of Goma, U.N. officials said Wednesday. UNICEF and other aid agencies now plan to airlift emergency aid from the Zairian capital of Kinshasa to Kisangapi, U.N. spokeswoman Ruth Marshall said. At Goma’s main hospital, workers struggled to get by without electricity, running water, medicines or supplies. More than half the staff has fled. Shell ing wrecked the last ambulance, and the hospital’s 40 remaining patients lay ( in rancid-smelling wards. Issues of politics, sovereignty and security all stand in the way of getting aid to the hungry Zairians and the Rwandan refugees. U.N. agencies and international aid organizations have flown supplies into neighboring Rwanda, but delivery has been stalled by lack of access to the area and security problems. senator calls tor buyer awareness WASH1NUTON (AP) — As Americans watch their children unwrap gifts this holiday season, they should think of the youngsters who probably made them for pennies a day in for eign countries, Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin said Wednesday. He and consumer advocate Ralph Nader asked parents to avoid buying toys and other gifts thht could have been made in countries with wide spread abusive child labor. “It’s ironic that when consumers buy a can of tuna fish, they know if dolphins are protected, but when they buy their holiday gifts, they don’t know if children are protected,” Harkin, a Democrat, said. “In this country, child labor is ille gal,” Nader said. “But child labor abroad can produce items like carpets and sell them legally in this country.” Harkin advised shoppers to: • Look for a “Made in the USA” label. While such a label does not guar antee a product wasn’t made through “child exploitation or other labor abuses,” he said, child labor is largely a problem with foreign-made goods. • Ask retailers what steps they re taking to stock products that are not made by children and urge them to carry products that are certified “child labor free.” • Contact manufacturers directly and the celebrities who endorse their products to ask what they’re doing to ensure their products were not made with child labor. • Call trade groups and local cham bers of commerce to urge them to sup port independent monitoring efforts. Tell friends and neighbors about the problem and urge them to get involved. • Ask their elected officials to sup port a bill Harkin will introduce that would ask manufacturers to voluntar ily label their sporting goods and cloth ing products as free of child labor. About 250 million children be tween the ages of 5 and 14 are work ing in developing countries, according to the International Labour Organiza tion. About 61 piercent of child work ers are in Asia, 32 percent are in Af rica and 7 percent live in Latin America, the group said. ii The caring consumer must be willing to inquire, to suggest or to protest.” U.S. Rep. George Miller “The caring consumer must be will ing to inquire, to suggest or to protest,” Rep. George Miller. D-Calif., said in a written statement. “If enough consum ers take these steps, companies will re spond.” Harkin said he also will reintroduce another bill that would ban importa tion of goods made through abusive child labor when Congress reconvenes in January. The bill drew little support during the 104th Congress. Russia, NATO negotiate new ties BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — Russia accepted a NATO overture Wednesday to negotiate ties with the military alliance but denounced its plans to expand eastward as likely to divide Europe again. “We continue to be against NATO enlargement,” Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov said at a joint news conference with NATO Secretary-Gen eral Javier Solana. “This is based on the firm belief that enlargement of NATO will lead to a new division of Europe.” He added: “We think security should be individual; security should extend to all of Europe.” But Primakov said Russia was will ing to hold talks with NATO on a new relationship with the alliance provided the result is a document that “deals with our concerns.” He did not appear to be mollified by NATO’s pledge Tuesday not to de ploy nuclear weapons in Central and Eastern Europe when former Soviet allies are accepted as members. Solana, for his part, said he had re affirmed to the Russian minister NATO’s intention of building “a good, partnership with our Russian friends.” Solana said NATO would like to have the relationship worked out by this summer’s planned summit meet ing when potential new members are invited to begin bargaining for mem bership. The summit is set for Madrid July 8-9. On Tuesday, Secretary of State Warren Christopher assured a nervous Russia that nuclear weapons would not be deployed in Eastern and Central Europe if NATO proceeds with an east ward expansion. But the former Soviet allies would be backed by the nuclear-armed United States and the rest of NATO if they are attacked, American officials said. Christopher offered the assurance to Russia in his ninth and final speech to the North Atlantic Council. He is retiring next month. Ti' * “We are declaring that in today’s Europe, NATO has no intention, no plan and no need to station nuclear weapons on the territory of any new members,” Christopher said, “We are affirming that no NATO nuclear forces are presently on alert.” In a meeting Tuesday night with Christopher the Russian foreign min ister did not shrink from criticizing NATO’s plan. “We treat this nega tively” he told Christopher in an 80 minute meeting at NATO headquarters. Under the NATO charter the United States and the 15 other current mem bers “will enjoy the protection that comes with NATO membership,” in cluding nuclear weapons, State Depart ment spokesman Nicholas Bums said later. Bums also stressed NATO would not be deterred from expanding east ward, whatever Russia’s views. “No country will have a veto,” he said. study shows drop m campus cnme rates WASHINGTON (AP) — With three out of four campuses employing police officers with arrest power, the nation’s colleges have far lower vio lent and property crime rates than the country as a whole, the Justice Depart ment reported Wednesday. In its first study of campus law en forcement, the department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics found that there were 64 violent crimes and 2,141 property crimes reported to police for every 100,000 students in 1994, the most re cent year with complete data. By comparison, in the nation as a whole that year, there were 716 vio lent crimes and 4,656 property crimes for every 100,000 residents. The bureau surveyed public and private four-year institutions with 2,500 or more students last year. These schools enrolled four out of five of the nation’s nearly 9 million college stu dents. “The reason the campus crime rates are so low is that colleges and univer sities have recruited huge numbers of security personnel to protect students,” said Jack Levin, a professor of crimi nology and sociology at Northeastern University in Boston. “You can’t sell an expensive college education to par ents who believe their children aren’t going to be safe, so colleges in urban settings have become armed camps. And it’s working very well.” t Colleges and universities last year employed nearly 11,000 full-time sworn police officers, who had been given general arrest powers by a state or local government, the statistics bu reau found. New law relies mothers for getting rid of guns I The Associated Press A new federal law to take guns away from anyone ever convicted of domestic abuse may have to rely heavily on the honor system for en forcement. Experts estimate there are hun dreds of thousands of people with past abuse convictions. No one can say for sure how many of them have guns. And the law, which took effect Sept. 30, doesn’t actually require federal, state or local police agen cies to go looking for the weapons. Many such agencies just don’t have the time, the manpower, the records or the practical means to systematically find and seize the guns. “I don’t know how we would do that,” said Sgt. C.L. Williams, chief of the Dallas Police Department’s family violence unit. “Call up Mary Jones and say, 'Hi, does Steve still have a gun in the house?”’ If a convicted abuser gets caught with a gun after running afoul of the law again, police can, of course, seize the weapon. But as for the other hundreds of thousands of people subject to the law, police departments can only hope that those gun owners will get rid of their weapons on their own. The law applies to anyone with a misdemeanor conviction for us ing or attempting to use force against an intimate partner or fam ily member. Violators can get up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The first known use of the law occurred Wednesday, involving a man who bought a gun at a pawn shop and wounded his wife two years after being convicted of as saulting her, said Stephen Rapp, U.S. attorney in Iowa. William M. Smith, 20, of Cedar Falls, Iowa, was charged with vio lating the gun law. He was already under arrest in the shooting. Catching violators in any sys tematic way would be difficult, however. State computer records often don’t list misdemeanors, and many don’t specify whether a crime was domestic violence. The law will mostly come into play as domestic violence cases and other crime investigations arise, said Drew Diamond, a retired Tulsa, Okla., police chief now with the Police Executive Research Forum. “I wouldn’t see police depart ments going and contacting every body who’s been convicted of do mestic violence and asking if they have a gun,” said Diamond, who is working with the Justice Depart ment on improving police response to domestic violence. “I haven’t heard anybody suggesting that.” John Magaw, director of the fed eral Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, has recommended simply that people affected by the law be “encouraged” to give up their guns. Nicholas Gess, the Justice De partment director of intergovern mental affairs, said it’s up to the gun owner to decide exactly how to do that. “There’s nothing that says you can’t sell or can’t give it to your fa vorite nephew,” Gess said Tuesday. “The law prohibits you from pos sessing the firearm. How you dis possess yourself is entirely up to you.” Gess, who works with local and state police, added: “The goal here isn’t to charge them. It’s to get them not to have a gun in their posses sion.” The law also applies to law en forcement officers and military per sonnel, who use guns in their work. The Pentagon is awaiting advice from the Justice Department cm how to apply the law, and some police departments have begun disarming officers. Lawrence Sherman, chairman of criminology at the University of Maryland, estimated 100,000 to 150,000 people last year alone could be subject to the new law, for a total of several million Americans. ' ' ■ ■ • , -V. • - •: ^ A -V ‘ ‘^ Nebraskan Mt FAX NUMBER: 472-1761 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board. Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St.. Lincoln, NE 68588-0448. Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions. 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